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3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies – Vol 25(2): 61 – 73
http://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2502-05
Carl Rogers’ Notion of “Self-actualization” in Joyce’s A Portrait
of the Artist as a Young Man
SAEED YAZDANI
Department of English, Bushehr Branch,
Islamic Azad University, Bushehr, Iran
Ysaeedyazdani240@gmail.com
STEPHEN ROSS
Department of English, University of Victoria,
British Colombia, Canada
ABSTRACT
Loss of identity, alienation, and self-actualization, along with the split in self, are important ideas of literary
works belonging to the first half of the twentieth century. Carl Rogers has pointed out to the split between the
real and ideal self. He describes self-actualization as a fluid process and the self as an essential part of one’s
personality that determines how one relates to the world. Rogers believes that the real self is a self-concept that
a person might experience, whereas the ideal self is the one that person would like to achieve. This article
analyzes the personality of the protagonist of James Joyce's A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, Stephen
Dedalus, using Carl Rogers' notion of self and self-actualization, with particular reference to the incongruency
of the real and ideal self. Roger's notion of the self, has not yet been applied on Joyce's works in the previous
studies, and so is highlighted here in relation to A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.
Keywords: self-actualization; real self; ideal self; alienation; personality
INTRODUCTION
Criticism on the topic of selfhood and identity in James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist as a
Young Man tend to fall into two camps. In one camp are critics such as Gerald Dehorty, Alan
Warren Friedman, and Paul Farkas, who consider Stephen’s identity in the light of egoism,
individuation, paranoia, autoeroticism, patriarchal detachment, and subjectivity. For example,
in “The Irony of the Artist as a Young Man: A Study in the Structure of
Joyce’s Portrait,” Farkas (1971) emphasizes Stephen’s subjectivity, and asserts that:
“Stephen appears the greatest fool and ends up locked in a world of purely subjective
impressions” (p. 29). In the other camp are critics such as Michael Seidel, H.G. Wells, Harold
Bloom, and Lee Spink who agree on Stephen’s inconsistency, sexual awareness, and
rebellion against priesthood. These later critics consider Stephen, not from a subjective
viewpoint, but in relation to his surroundings. A good example of this critical attitude comes
from Maud Ellman, who describes Stephen’s identity as “a scar that periodically reopens, so
that its letters may remain all fresh and visible” (Ellmann 2010, p. 138). Another critic,
Robert Spoo (1994) believes that in Portrait, “history is important because it belongs to
Stephen's emerging sense of self” (p. 39). He maintains that: “the novel is unusual…in its
portrayal of a sensitive historical consciousness taking shape under the myriad pressures and
repressions of Irish life in the late nineteenth century.” He considers Stephen's fascination
with historical pictures as possessing “an intense, brooding quality that betrays a Romantic
conception of the hero as isolated and misunderstood” (p. 40). Thus far, no critic has
approached the problem of self-formation in Portrait by way of Carl Rogers’ theories, as I
propose to do here. For this purpose, I use Carl Rogers’ notion of self as a model to
demonstrate the psychological features and identity of the protagonist of Joyce’s novel from a
different perspective than those mentioned above, that is, a split into “real self” and “ideal
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3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies – Vol 25(2): 61 – 73
http://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2502-05
self”. In what follows, I will outline how Rogers’ theories are applicable to Joyce’s novel,
suggesting that they bring new insight to the problem of identity and self-actualization.
Another psychologist who has a close affinity with Rogers regarding the issue of self
is Karen Horney. She believes that if individuals have a proper conception of their real
selves, then they can achieve what they wish, within reasonable boundaries. For her, self-
actualization is the individual’s aim through life. She also divides self into two “real self” and
“ideal self;” the real self has the potential for growth and happiness, but it also has its
shortcomings. The ideal self is used as a model to assist the real self in developing its
possibilities and achieving self-actualization. Like Rogers, Horney is concerned about the
neuroticism. In Self Analysis (1968), Horney concludes that neuroticism leads to resentment
and hostility towards the self and others. She believes that neurotic individuals are sometimes
unable to cope with either of their selves. For her, their real self is getting damaged, they keep
losing their “center of gravity,” and they are directed by other forces (p. 191).
So far, both in psychology and literary criticism, the issue of identity has been studied
as “the maturation of personality” (Jung 1990, p. 198) and, from a psychological perspective,
“individuation”. Individuation happens as a result of bringing the personal and collective
unconscious into the conscious; it is a process of psychological differentiation, with the goal
of developing of the individual personality. Jung considers it as the process, by which an
individual develops. It is the psychological evolution of a person, making him distinct from
the general. An individual tends to become psychologically mature, promoting freedom and
justice; this individual has a sound understanding of the workings of human nature and the
universe. Ironically, however, in Joyce’s Portrait, the protagonist’s development does not
result in individuation as described by Jung; on the contrary, it results in Stephen’s alienation,
loneliness, and degradation. Weldon Thornton points out to the influence Jung had on Joyce
in creating the character of Stephen, stating:
Though Jung had not articulated his ideas of anima and animus when Portrait was
published, it seems clear that joyce is here thinking in such terms. In chapters I and III,
Stephen is responding to some ‘external’, authoritative behest, represented in each case
by a male figure, [a priest]… In chapters II and IV, Stephen is responding to some deeply
personal and internal call, in both cases epitomized in a female figure who objectifies this
latent part of his psyche. (Thornton 2009, p. 56)
Carl Rogers has made significant contributions to the fields of psychotherapy and
educational psychology; he suggests that people should shape themselves through free choice
and action. He considered the “self” to be the center of the experience. Brian Thorne (2013)
in his work entitled Carl Rogers, describes Rogers’ term “the actualizing tendency” in
individuals, as “an underlying and inherent tendency both to maintain himself and to move
towards the constructive accomplishment of its potential” (p. 26). Rogers compares a human
being with a tulip: a tulip moves towards becoming as complete and perfect flower, and
likewise, a person moves towards growth and the accomplishment of the highest possible
level of perfection achievable by an individual. For Rogers the only constraints placed upon
the actualizing tendency arise from the environment in which the person finds himself or
herself. Just as the tulip is unlikely to flourish in poor soil and without proper care and
watering, so, too, the growth of the human being will be stunted if the conditions for the
encouragement of the actualizing tendency are unfavorable (p. 26). This process describes the
development of characters in literary works such as Joyce’s Portrait. Actualization involves
the differentiation of organs and psychological functions and the development of autonomy,
and “the process of actualization is keenly sensitive to the subtle complexity of human
differences” (p. 27). Rogers believes every individual has a need for perfection. For Rogers,
“self – actualization” is a fluid process in which the subject tends to self-reference: “I am the
self, which I currently conceptualize myself as being”. This conceptualization does not only
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3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies – Vol 25(2): 61 – 73
http://doi.org/10.17576/3L-2019-2502-05
depend on the experiences and conditioning, which constitute his past but also on
unpredictable events and interactions. The self seems to be “happy, confident and assured at
one moment and despairing, inadequate and demoralized the next”; this startling
transformation may be “nothing more than the relevant comment of a fellow human being. In
such an unreliable context as human existence, it is scarcely surprising, that for many people
the process of self-actualization is fraught with complexity and anxiety”(p. 29). Rogers
believes that every person could achieve his or her goal, wish and desires in life; this longing
leads to self-actualization. Rogers believes that man has one basic motive in his life that is
“the tendency to self-actualize” (McLeod 2014). He believes that the improvement of
individuals depends upon their environments. He believes that people are inherently good,
“they become destructive only when a poor self-concept or external constraints override the
valuing process”. He further adds that “for a person to achieve self-actualization they must be
in a state of congruence” (pp.1-2). According to Rogers, the closer our self-image and ideal-
self are to each other, the more consistent or congruent we are and the higher our sense of self
worth” (p. 2). The ideal self in childhood is different from the ideal self in adulthood, thus we
can assume that the ideal self in changing and dynamic.
In client-centered discussions, the term ‘self’ is used in more than one framework but,
most often, in reference to the person’s concept of self. “The self-concept emerged as a
primary construct, not right at the start but during the first decade of the new client-centered
school. It was first highlighted by Rogers in his featured address as retiring president of the
American Psychological Association” (Barrett-Lennard 2010, p. 76). Carl Rogers’s theory of
personality has as its main structures in the concept of self, ideal self, self-regard, and self-
concept. The self is the main structural component of personality. According to Rogers, the
self consists of all the ideas, perceptions, concepts and values that characterize the individual.
Rogers’s theory of “self” centers on the nature of self and the conditions, that allows it to
develop freely. In On Becoming a Person: a Therapist's View of Psychotherapy (1961),
Rogers maintains: “I would like to share with you, my perception of what human beings
appear to be striving for when they are free to choose” (p. 164). In Rogers's view, the self is
the center of the human experience; he names his theory of personality as “self-theory.”
According to Rogers, the self is the performative part of one's personality that organizes how
one relates to the world. It is the feeling of being “I” or “me,” the person who looks back at
one in the mirror, and the sense of being a unique individual with likes, dislikes, needs, and
values. During his therapy practice, Rogers realized that all clients who talked in terms of the
“self,” were somehow dissatisfied with their attempts to evaluate their actions. This indicated
to him that the concept of “self,” was a significant element in the client’s experience, often a
confusing and distressing one. Furthermore, clients often seemed to have an implicit goal, the
evolution of a real self into an aspirational or an ideal self. According to Rogers the
individual who is psychologically free moves in the direction of becoming a more fully
functioning individual. The individual is more able to live fully in and with each and all of his
senses and reactions. He significantly uses of all his organic tools to sense, as accurately as
possible, the existential situation within and without. And the individual uses “all of the
information his nervous system can thus supply, using it in awareness, but recognizing that
his total organism may be, and often is, wiser than his awareness any view of what constitutes
the good life carries with it many implications, and the view that I have presented is no
exception” (pp. 191-192). In one of her lectures at the APA session, Roger pointed out that
there was no need for the client to “cover over” her experiences; that the client’s picture of
her ability and the experienced feeling of complete inability, together have produced and
“integral pattern of self as a person with real but imperfect abilities”. This acceptance of the
self leads to release of an energy called “self-actualization” (Rogers 1947, p. 14)
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3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies – Vol 25(2): 61 – 73
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Self-concept is the self that is currently experienced, whereas the ideal self is the self-
concept that an individual would most like to possess. “Not surprisingly, happy people tend
to have a much smaller discrepancy between their ideal self and their self-concept than is the
case with those who are relatively unhappy” (Eysenck 1975, p. 75).An individual's self-
concept is mainly conscious, and includes thoughts and feelings about oneself, as an
individual. In Rogers’ theory, the systematic study of any part of the self that exists under the
level of conscious awareness in not possible. There is a significant distinction between the
real self-concept and the ideal self-concept; the real self is the self that a person experiences,
whereas the ideal self is the self that an individual would like to achieve. An individual’s self-
concept influences both one’s understanding of the world and one’s behavior, and behavior
that is not consistent with one’s self-concept, might make an individual feel uncomfortable
and anxious, to the extent that it may even preserve one’s self-concept. One’s ideal self might
excel in talents, skills, and art. If one's real self is far from this idealized image, then one
might feel dissatisfied with life and might consider oneself a failure.
Thorne and Sanders (2013) discuss Rogers’ theory and especially his theory of self.
They believe that for Rogers, there was often a profound dissatisfaction at his clients’
inability to give adequate expression to the self, or with their current evaluation of the self;
these clients were apt to make remarks such as: “I feel I'm not being my real self”, “I wonder
who I really am', and “It feels good to just be myself here”, and “I don't want anyone to know
the real me”. There often seemed to be “an implied goal which was connected with the
evolution of a 'real' self or the aspiration to an 'ideal' self. For many clients both states of
being, seemed equally impossible of attainment” (p. 28). Rogers concluded from these
transformations and modifications in the self-concept that the self is not a fixed thing but a
product of the person's response to experience which are in the form of a “conceptual gestalt
composed of perceptions of the characteristics of the "I" or "me" and the perceptions of the
relationships of the " l" or "me" to others and to various aspects of life, together with the
values attached to these perceptions” (pp. 28-29)
In his theory of self, Rogers argues that due to interaction with the environment, and
specifically due to evaluation interaction with other individuals, “the structure of self is
formed- an organized, fluid, but consistent conceptual pattern of perceptions of
characteristics and relationships of the “I” or the “me,” together with values attached to these
concepts” (Corsini & Wedding 2000, p. 159). In such an unreliable framework as human
existence it is rarely surprising that for many people the process of self-actualization is full of
complexity and anxiety. For those individuals who find their way to the therapist's door this
conflict “between the struggle for self-actualization and the basic tendency of the human
organism may well have reached a point of intolerable tension. The question which now
arises is why for some people the striving for self-actualization should lead to such alienation
from their organismic integrity” (Thorne & Sanders, p. 29). Nevid (2014) too discusses “self”
and the other related concepts. According to him Rogers believed that each of us have an
inner drive that leads us to strive toward self-actualization-toward realizing our own unique
capacities. The path toward self-actualization is a process of “self-discovery and self-
awareness, of tapping into our own true feelings and needs, accepting them as our own, and
acting in ways that genuinely reflect them” (p. 404).
METHODOLOGY
The article focuses on the concept of self actualization in James Joyce’ novel A Portrait of
the Artist as a Young Man, with reference to Carl Rogers’ theory of self. The method of
discussion is through a text-based analysis of the important works of Rogers and the novel, A
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